Vibrations from dilution refrigerators can disrupt qubits in quantum computers, causing errors and reducing accuracy.
A new quantum computing chip turns destructive noise into a programmable feature, helping scientists study signal loss and error correction to build more effective systems in the future.
IonQ and Quantinuum are battling it out for quantum computing supremacy.
Just as overlapping ripples on a pond can amplify or cancel each other out, waves of many kinds—including light, sound and atomic vibrations—can interfere with one another. At the quantum level, this ...
Dr. Pravir Malik is the founder and technologist of QIQuantum and the Forbes Technology Council Community leader for Quantum ...
Ramin Ayanzadeh joined CU Boulder’s Department of Computer Science as an assistant professor in the fall of 2024. His research focuses on trustworthy quantum computing to enhance the reliability and ...
Classical computing has operated as the fundamental power behind our digital world for many decades. Modern civilization relies on classical systems to operate smartphones and global financial ...
A surge of funding and federal action is giving the once-futuristic technology a more immediate role in everything from ...
This technology may or may not be a big deal. Simultaneously.